Prose fiction

Goals for today 
Practise an unseen extract for the mock exam 
Guided technique analysis 
Feedback from the examiners 
Introduction construction 
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Slide 1: Diapositive
EngelsFurther Education (Key Stage 5)

Cette leçon contient 16 diapositives, avec diapositives de texte.

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Goals for today 
Practise an unseen extract for the mock exam 
Guided technique analysis 
Feedback from the examiners 
Introduction construction 

Slide 1 - Diapositive

Rate the word 1 to 4
1. I do not know the word, and I have never seen it before. 
2. I've heard or seen the word before, but I'm not sure what it means. 
3. I know the word and can recognise and understand it while reading, but I probably wouldn't feel comfortable using it in writing or speech. 
4. I know the word well and can use it correctly in writing or speech. 

Eloquent 

Slide 2 - Diapositive

Word of the day
Eloquent (adj) – expressing ideas clearly and in a way that influences people. Being able to be expressive, articulate or moving in speech or writing




Which character(s) that we have met in our literary explorations would you describe as eloquent? 










































The priest gave such an eloquent sermon that most churchgoers were crying

Slide 3 - Diapositive

Topics, concepts, key words 

  1. What is the purpose of this extract? What feeling and information does the author want to convey? 
  2. For each paragraph (three) write next to the paragraph how this paragraph helps to structure the main message of the extract.

Slide 4 - Diapositive

Diction, descriptive language, adjectives 
  • "forced his tottering limbs" 
  • "leaden hand" 
  • "demoniac clangour" 
  • "the brazen fury" 
  • "Sick, giddiness overcame him" 

Slide 5 - Diapositive

Personification 
  • "The brazen fury of the bells" 
  • "Mouth up, mouth down, they brawled with their tongues of bronze" 
  • "The bells were still sounding their frenzied call" 
  • "it was a brute pain"

Slide 6 - Diapositive

Sentence length and structure 
  • "Winsey did not want to hear anymore" - simple sentence 
  • He passed the sweating ringers and climbed again - up through the clock-chamber, piled with household goods, and up and on to the bell-chamber itself" - parenthetical remark, complex sentence 
  • "His ear-drums were cracking; his senses swam away" coordinated - main clauses - semi-colon 

Slide 7 - Diapositive

Simile, metaphor, comparison 
  • "like the blows from a thousand beating hammers" 
  • "shrill clangour was a raving madness, an assault of devils" 
  • "as though his bones were turned to water" 
  • "was like a sword in the brain" 

Slide 8 - Diapositive

Alliteration 
  • "drenched and drunken with noise" -plosive hard sound 
  • "it rocked and reeled with the reeling of the bells" 
  • "stunned and shaken" 
  • "stabbing and shivering" 

Slide 9 - Diapositive

sensory imagery 
  • Auditory imagery " from a thousand beating hammers" 
  • "Buffeted by the clamour" 
  • "brazen crash and clatter there went one high note, shrill and sustained"  
  • Tactile, kineasthetic  - "The belfry heaved and wheeled about him as the bells dipped and swung" 

Slide 10 - Diapositive

enumeration, listing, repetition  
  • "it was brute pain, a grinding, bludgeoning, ran-dan, crazy, intolerable torment" - asyndeton 
  • "foot by foot, rung by rung" - repetition 
  • "brazen fury ...through the brazen crash 
  • "shrill, high, sweet, relentless note" asyndeton 
  • "reeled with the reeling of the bells" - repetition 
  • drunken with noise ... like a drunken man 
timer
1:00

Slide 11 - Diapositive

MPO
Multiple Paragraph Outline 
Complete the MPO by adding the thesis statement and the topic sentences 

Slide 12 - Diapositive

Prose fiction

Slide 13 - Diapositive

Slide 14 - Diapositive

The name of the extract is stated
The author or originating source is given
The text type is clearly identified without elaboration
where the text appeared is stated (if known)
When it was produced is stated (if known)
The content is discussed: what does the text actually say (brief summary)
The intended audience/reader is stated (if definable) 
The purpose(s) is stated
The social, cultural and temporal context is addressed (if available)
The thesis: what you find most important about the text (without elaboration) (main idea/main theme)
The structure of your analysis is stated 

Introduction

Slide 15 - Diapositive

Hook 
The name of the extract
The Nine Tailors  - extract 
Author or source 
Dorothy L. Sayers 
Text type 
Prose fiction - extract from a novel 
where appeared
The Nine Tailors 
when produced 
1959
content discussed 
This extract describes the physical experience of Wimsey, the protagonist, as he scales a belfry and ascends the roof whilst the bells are pealing. 
intended audience 
Readers who know Dorothy L. Sayers work or are interested in prose fiction 
purpose 
entertain/ to entertain the reader/ to increase tension 
social cultural & temporal context 
published in 1959 (British crime novelist) 
Thesis statement 
Plan of development 

Slide 16 - Diapositive